Argued
in sentence
1563 examples of Argued in a sentence
Indeed, it could be
argued
that much of the region’s troubles are attributable to the absence of an indigenous “zero point” onto which a modern culture could be sturdily pinned.
Monnet and Schuman
argued
that a political union similar to America’s would prevent the types of conflict that had caused three major European wars – an appealing idea, but one that overlooked America’s horrific Civil War.
He
argued
that a timid BOJ should learn from its more aggressive counterparts, the US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank.
In 1934, he presented a "physico-mathematical" analysis of the forces acting on an idealized spherical cell, a model that he
argued
was sufficient to explain cell division.
Cultural traits that perpetuate poverty are, it is argued, born of centuries of social accumulation and cannot be changed quickly.
PARIS – In Democracy in America, Alexis de Tocqueville
argued
that the public’s trust alleviates pressure on the state, allowing it to function more effectively.
As the Nobel laureate economist Kenneth Arrow
argued
in 1972, “much of the economic backwardness in the world can be explained by the lack of mutual confidence.”
At first the Nobel Committee
argued
that the theory might be wrong and wrote that it would be best to wait for experimental evidence that confirmed Einstein's theory.
Many have
argued
that this is the case.
In a 2016 paper, my colleagues and I
argued
that the EU should regard Brexit as an opportunity to define a new model for partnership with countries that want strong economic and security links, without political integration.
We further
argued
that, at a time when enlargement momentum has been depleted, the EU should work to diversify its relationships with neighbors.
We also
argued
in favor of a permanent process of policy consultation that would, as a counterpart to the UK’s submission to EU economic rules, give the British a voice – but no vote – in the creation of European economic legislation.
That ban was later upheld by the Constitutional Court, which
argued
that allowing such public religious expression would likely infringe on the “neutrality” of the public sphere, and so lead to “divisiveness.”
In wartime, when loose lips can sink ships and secrets are crucial, Winston Churchill
argued
that the truth may be “so precious that she should always be attended by a bodyguard of lies.”
He
argued
“that they are immensely rash in their regardlessness, in their vague optimism and comfortable belief that nothing really serious ever happens.
One Asian analyst
argued
that by 2050, there will be three world powers: the United States, China, and India.
Even so, the optimists who spoke last year of a soft landing or a mild “V-shaped” eight-month recession were proven wrong, while those who
argued
that this would be a longer and more severe “U-shaped” 24-month recession – the US downturn is already in its 18th month – were correct.
That’s one reason why the great nineteenth-century economist Henry George
argued
that the best taxes are land taxes.
It is often
argued
that the United States, as the major reserve-currency issuer, enjoys what then French Finance Minister Valéry Giscard d’Estaing famously called in the 1960’s an “exorbitant privilege,” in the form of lower borrowing costs (a benefit estimated to be worth as much as 80 basis points).
Recently, many observers
argued
that America’s gridlocked political system would prevent the country from translating its abundant power resources into leadership.
As one perceptive journalist recently argued, “America still has the means to address nearly any of its structural weaknesses… energy use, medical costs, the right educational and occupational mix to rebuild a robust middle class.
As my colleagues and I recently argued, one way to understand this is to think of industries as stitching together complementary bits of knowhow, just as words are made by putting together letters.
Yet, as I
argued
in a recent book, financial instruments that increase our ability to manage risks that are now regarded as "non-diversifiable" would be of great economic importance.
Cardinal Dziwisz of Cracow
argued
that there could be no place in Poland “for retribution, revenge, lack of respect for human dignity, and reckless accusations.”
Indeed, Luxembourg’s prime minister, Jean-Claude Juncker, recently
argued
that Europe’s growing north-south polarization has set the continent back by a century.
They
argued
the case for skill against cheapness.
I have often
argued
that Turkey should not intervene in the internal affairs of its neighbors or adopt a Middle East-centered policy.
An uprising in Poland and the far more tumultuous Hungarian Revolution
argued
for the opposite.
Moreover, as Bilmes and I
argued
in our book The Three Trillion Dollar War, the wars contributed to America’s macroeconomic weaknesses, which exacerbated its deficits and debt burden.
In the end, “the Berlin Crisis was solved through the outcome of the Cuban Missile Crisis," the historian Ernest May
argued.
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